Legislating what someone can wear is now clearly a political and/or cultural issue, rather than something to do with safety or whatever else reason.
Chocs - aren't you just arguing that it is ok to be intolerant of someone else if they look different from you? How is that different from the same arguments that applied to Blacks and Asians in the 60s and 70s (they talk different, smell different, eat differently, have funny music).
All this over a piece of cloth covering a lady's face?
This from Linda Heard of Gulf news:
It appears that some Europeans consider Muslims fair game. Imagine the outcry if police were empowered to whip off a Sikh's turban, a nun's habit or an orthodox Jew's tallit (prayer shawl). It just wouldn't happen.
If these bans were based primarily on security concerns, the Europeans would have a stronger argument. But they're not. Instead, Belgian and French politicians are fierce in their concern for the well-being of Muslim women all of a sudden. Do you seriously buy that? Thought not!
http://gulfnews.com/opinions/columnists ... n-1.621933
Cheers,
Shafique